Steven Soderbergh's King of the Hill is grotesquely
underrated, an absolutely fantastic movie that feels like a unique anomaly in
the filmmaker's eclectic oeuvre.
Released in 1993, this was the indie master’s third film, after the
breakout success of the highly influential Sex, Lies, and Videotape in 1989,
which was followed up in 1991 by the little seen, black and white oddity Kafka,
which is better than its reputation suggests, but still not a 100%
success. Still finding his voice as a
filmmaker at the time, King of the Hill is a painterly, 1930's set drama that
looks at the harsh realities facing a family during the Great Depression. The film would find warm critical embrace
after a rocky Cannes Film Festival debut, and was one of the first releases
from Universal's independent label Gramercy Pictures. King of the Hill flopped at the box office,
grossing just over $1 million in the United States; I'm not even sure if an
international theatrical release was attempted.
Featuring a cast of child actors and extremely talented character players
rather than big Hollywood stars, the film was always going to face a struggle
to get noticed, which is a shame, because this is the warmest, most emotional
movie of Soderbergh's often cold and clinical career as a filmmaker. I've long been fascinated with his lightning
quick turnaround in between projects, how he often times shoots and edits his
own features, and how he's been able to swiftly move from genre to genre
throughout the last 26 years, almost always with spectacular results. He’s made experimental, form-pushing movies
for himself and has also been able to play at the top ranks of the studio
level, delivering big box office when needed. Up front: I've not seen a Soderbergh movie
that I haven't liked on some sort of level, and a few of them, most notably
Schizopolis, Out of Sight, The Limey, Traffic, The Informant!, and Contagion,
are films I feel to be masterpieces for the filmmaker, and his late-career run
of Magic Mike, Haywire, and Side Effects were a total triple threat of genre skewering
brilliance. His recent work on the Cinemax
series The Knick is bold and convention breaking, infusing a period atmosphere
(a turn of the century NYC hospital) with his modern camera style and
anachronistic musical choices. But it's
King of the Hill that feels so remarkably different for Soderbergh as a
director, a movie that he made almost in response to his down and dirty indie
cred that he had developed on his first two features, looking to expand his
abilities and further confound his critics.
A young Jesse Bradford is Aaron, a 12 year old boy who is
struggling to survive on his own in a shabby motel after his mother is sent to
a hospital for having tuberculosis, and his father is forced to hit the road as
a travelling salesman. Set in the
Midwest, King of the Hill painfully examines the disintegration of the family
unit and the crushing reality of the “American dream” for so many people during
that turbulent time period.
Heartbreakingly, Aaron is also forced to say good bye to his younger
brother, who is sent off to live with moneyed relatives who thankfully offer to
lend a helping hand. Bradford is
extraordinary in this film, conveying desperation, hope, humility, and humor,
all sometimes within the same scene, as he learns to navigate the uncertain and
sad situation that he's found himself in. There's one unforgettable sequence that shows
him, in an act of starvation and imagination, cutting out pictures of food
items (a chicken breast, potatoes, corn, a pad of butter) from a magazine,
which he then plates, mentally examines, and eats with a fork and knife, trying
to approximate the taste of the food through the flavorless morsels of
paper. The way Soderbergh directed this
film was perfect, really. Scene after
scene of poignant drama unfolds, with moments of honest laughter spiking the
edges, and it’s a testament to Soderbergh’s involvement with the material that
the film never feels overbearing or maudlin. He also avoids cheap
sentimentality, so even when things might be taking a turn for the better, you’re
left with the implicit understanding that things could just as easily unravel
all over again. Soderbergh got as close
to these characters as he's ever possibly been as a storyteller with one of his
narratives, telling a wonderfully humanist story that anyone can relate too. A teenaged
Katherine Heigl makes a strong supporting turn as Bradford's potential
girlfriend, while Jeroen Krabbe is perfectly cast as Bradford's German
immigrant father, a man who believes in the "Tough Love" school of
parenting, and while not the most trustworthy of men, he makes the case that
for all his faults, he truly loves his sons, despite doing some things that in
retrospect seem a tad harsh. Karen
Allen, Spalding Grey, Elizabeth McGovern, and a barely able to shave Adrien
Brody all round out the excellent cast with memorable, scene-stealing moments, further
underscoring Soderbergh’s inherent gift for casting.
Shot on gorgeous Super 35 film by Elliot Davis and fully
utilizing the 2.35:1 widescreen aspect ratio, Soderbergh crafted what's
undoubtedly his prettiest movie to date, a film that he feels is "too
pretty," a comment that can be heard while watching the highly informative
interview that's included on the superlative Criterion Collection Blu-ray
platter. He seems curiously disappointed
with himself as a filmmaker in regards to King of the Hill, openly stating that
he wished he had shot the film in a more rough and tumble, grittier fashion,
which is more in line with his late era work and aesthetic. But I think one of
the best things about King of the Hill is how the film is overwhelmingly
beautiful at times, evoking a lost, calamitous era, with the juxtaposition of
the luscious images bouncing off the hard-scrabble nature and plight of the
characters. The production design is
supremely evocative of a long ago era, forever lost to pictures in books, with
period appropriate cars and clothes filling the frame without ever coming off
as precious or ostentatious. Soderbergh
has often been a filmmaker, much like David Fincher, who likes to look back at
his work and talk about the problems that he sees and how he'd do things
differently if he were to make the movie all over again. This must be a constant source of mental
nagging and anguish for storytellers, as the best of them are always
challenging themselves to make their movies better and more artistic. While I don't agree with the criticisms that
he throws at himself, I can respect him for having the hunger and desire to
critically look at his own work from more than two decades ago and contemplate
what he’d like to have a chance to redesign or reinterpret. But in its current form, King of the Hill
stands as a serious, important work for Soderbergh as a craftsman, and easily rests
as one of his finest overall efforts.
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